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Exactly how much more population growth do we really need? How about economic “growth†via an improving standard of living for those who are already here? --HARM
The reason we have these downward pressures on population growth particularly in the developed world (i.e. dis-incentives to rampant procreation) is just economics at work. Downward pressure on growth would not exist if the current system were not stressed at this point on the demographic curve--the system is trying to create an equilibrium at a point of lower population.
In addition, economic "growth" can still occur given a static or decreasing population level, however it is called "increased efficiency" instead of growth when this occurs. Technological advance and ingenuity does design ways to run the economic system of the world on less manual human labor, at which point efficiency is increased and a larger population is unnecessary. On the contrary, the larger population creates "diminishing returns to scale" whereby too many people actually strain the system and hinder its' smooth operation (think: too many cooks in the kitchen getting in each others' way).
Sorry if I bored anyone to tears with that little diatribe. I was an Economics major and actually find this stuff extremely intersting. :)
do you guys still think a bubble exsists? did you read ww.ReyEstate.com’s theory or UCLA’s Forecast report yesterday? Ouch, tough pill to swallow eh guys?
There will soon be no bubble in housing.
Lobster rules!
"SpendingURRent" -- what an F'ing idiot you are. Of course I read the report, the difference between you and me is that I don't need to take "hooked on phonics" to comprehend an economic report. Your chosen screenname alone belies your idiocy--there is no mortgage available in the entire Bay Area that charges less in monthly interest than I currently pay in rent. And that's just the interest expense of home-owning. So who's spending what? It's idiots like you that inflate asset bubbles in the first place--markets only deviate from fundamentals when their participants are irrational. Good luck off-loading your condos at break-even.
SpendingUrRent, do you happen to know a restaurant in SF that serves fugu? I want the whole meal: sashimi, nabe, skin, "white roe".
maybe i can form an asset bubble with lots of crap postings around the net on how its the next housing boom … A1337
I know you're kidding, but that is actually market manipulation and can be prosecuted. In addition, if you had a professional investment designation such as a CFA, you would be stripped of it by the CFA Institute if the spreading of information (even on the internet) was traced back to you. No joke.
maybe i can form an asset bubble with lots of crap postings around the net on how its the next housing boom …
Physical gold is a small asset class though.
How did SpendingUrRent miss this?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/economic_forecast
He only reads what he wants to hear.
Any macroeconomics guru here who could enlighten me about inflation or interest rate forecast for each year from 2006 thru 2009? I believe if intereste rates shoot up to 12% in 2009, then I would be worse off than now even if the home prices reduce by 20% in real dollars (not nominal). Comments?
@Realistic Desi,
How would you be worse off? Are you a homeowner, RE investor, or prospective homebuyer? If you're a homeowner and/or RE investor, are you heavily leveraged with IO/option-ARMs, or are you locked in with fixed-rate mortgages?
The details make all the difference in the world.
In any case, none of us here are professional economists (and you know what they say about economists: "An economist is someone who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn't happen today." --L.J. Peter.) :-)
Regardless, some on this blog are predicting interest rates will continue to rise for a short while, followed by "B52-Ben" slashing them to mitigate a bubble-aftermath recession and/or trigger higher inflation (currency and debt debasement), myself included. Others are predicting they could rise much higher, based on the assumption that overall inflation is picking up steam and the Fed will try to beat it back. Take your pick --no one has a crystal ball.
One thing to consider about inflation: as Peter P often points out, "inflation is not a single variable". Housing prices can still be falling --in real or nominal terms-- while the price of other goods and services rise. there is no economic law that will automatically prevent this from happening, and it has happened before. In such an environment, just about any investment other than RE (and providing a return above inflation) would be a good bet.
One thing to consider about inflation: as Peter P often points out, “inflation is not a single variableâ€. Housing prices can still be falling –in real or nominal terms– while the price of other goods and services rise. there is no economic law that will automatically prevent this from happening, and it has happened before. In such an environment, just about any investment other than RE (and providing a return above inflation) would be a good bet.
This is actually a law, or more like a science....people are already stretched, if people had to pay more for gas, food, utilities and such, they would have less disposable income to to service a monthly mortgage....This would certainly push back on the prices.
This is actually a law, or more like a science….people are already stretched, if people had to pay more for gas, food, utilities and such, they would have less disposable income to to service a monthly mortgage….This would certainly push back on the prices.
Better yet, housing price is not part of the CPI. Will we have hidden deflation?
Some general points on the population and Household formation:
The people who will form the new households during the next 20 years have already been born. They are in school now. They have been counted. There are more of them than there are people who will die during the next 20 years.
The population of the US is currently growing at about 1.3% per year. It will continue to grow for many decades. Because of immigration, the birth rate does not need to be above the replacement level for growth to continue.
Even without counting the expected additions from immigrants, the household formation growth is obvious.
The chart that was posted in Calculatedrisk.blogspot shows the percentage distribution of the population, not the absolute volume of each age cohort. As the population increases a smaller percentage of the ever larger total population can be a larger group.
The baby boom generation is a bulge in the population profile. That is not so important (yet). What is important is that the age cohorts that preceded the boomers are much smaller than the age cohorts that follow the baby boomers. So, as the parents of the baby boomers die off, the children of the baby boomers and others outnumber the dying cohorts. The population and household formations both increase.
Population growth tends to cause economic expansion. However, this does not necessarily mean increased prosperity. For prosperity to improve, the economic growth must exceed the population growth.
Flak, I generally come by here late at night. I am on the east coast. I can't stay around long because I am pretty much done for the day. It helps that I have very high energy and need less sleep than most. If I post I will normally wait for a while to discuss. I also return the next night to follow up. But it will be late like tonight.
Peter P, The fundamentals are not static, they shift over time on an upward long-term trend. So, when prices are above the fundaments and they decline, the bottom is not where the fundamentals once were, but where they have grown to be. In a growing economy the decline is normally smaller than the rise.
Regarding anticipation of household formation and demand compression: These are very real effects that are a factor in the prices rising faster than the fundamental-supported long-term trend. These are cyclical effects, and there is an opposite effect during the market decline. Classic market cycle stuff...
Well it’s very late on this side of the Hudson River, and I am going to bed. Lots of snow and ice expected here tomorrow… oh joy.
Peter P. wrote:
"Better yet, housing price is not part of the CPI. Will we have hidden deflation?
I checked into this recently, and was surprised at what I found. You can go to the website of the Bureau of Labor Statistics and look at the components of the CPI. I would encourage interested persons to do so. All the expenses in the "basket of goods" are given a weighting factor.
And yes there is a housing price factor in the CPI, they call it the rental equivalency or something like that. I compared the weighting of it to that in my own personal spending, it was within a percent of the proportion assigned in the CPI. So were the expenditures on all the major categories, within about a percent of the CPI weighting: the food, transportation, etc. The only item that was far off between my budget and the CPI was the life insurance premium: I did not see it in the CPI.
It's in vogue now to dismiss off the CPI, but at least for the time being, now that I've done the exercise, I'm not so skeptical about its accuracy.
I think what it really says is that if housing approaches half the personal spending, it's not the housing price that's out of whack: it's the spending on housing that's out of whack. (Three or so decades ago what folks deride here as $hitboxes were considered to be reasonably modest abodes. Certainly by standards of living all over the world they are still so.)
Better yet, housing price is not part of the CPI.
Housing should have its own index FPI (flipper price index). This index is very high right now, but is falling.
Ajh, Interesting… Zoovisitor obviously reads this website, since my lengthy post was copied word for word.
I don’t know whether I should be flattered or annoyed.
The peak of retirement will likely come between 2020 and 2025. However, it is the departure for nursing homes and the great beyond that will make the boomers net sellers of real estate.
Net housing formations will go flat for a bout 15 years as the boomers die off. I expect the period 2025 to 2040 to be the weakest real estate since the great depression. I have not yet tried to estimate how severe the price pressure will be because it it so far into the future -- so much can change.
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I’ve noticed that lately there have been a lot of big industry players raising Cain over proposals to limit or even eliminate the mortgage interest deduction (http://tinyurl.com/bht2q). These are the same “pro-business†industry blowhards who typically lobby with all their might against the evils of government “regulation†(which usually translates as “consumer protections†or “eliminating my favorite sacred-cow tax subsidyâ€).
I have a few questions for these people:
Consider the incentives government currently provides for individual homeowners: the 1997 tax law greatly increased the RE capital gains exemption ($250K single/$500K married: http://tinyurl.com/bsfzd). This exemption was even extended to second (investment) properties, for reasons we can only “speculate†about (*smile*). Add to this the already existing generous mortgage interest tax deduction and the popular “1031†tax shelter. Result? A tax incentives system rigged heavily in favor of RE “investing†over saving or investing in any other asset class –stocks, bonds, commodities, etc.
If this weren’t lopsided enough, taxpayers are also partly subsidizing risk for banks and mortgage companies. By selling their conforming loans to the GSEs and selling non-conforming (sub-prime) loans to private MBS issuers & REITS, the lender can simply walk away from default risk with profits in hand and go make more bad loans. (Btw, the GSE conforming loan cap was just raised another 16%: http://tinyurl.com/azd48.) Chickens will no doubt come home to roost for investors in private MBS paper at some point, but GSE-issued MBS paper has the implied full faith and backing of the U.S. taxpayer. This (assumed) low risk has translated into extremely low risk premiums by investors, and incredibly loose-to-nonexistent lending standards. To this day, the GSEs, which still purchase some 50% of the nation’s residential mortgages for MBS resale, remain privately owned for-profit companies with exclusive government monopoly charters, along with implied taxpayer guarantees and access to unlimited Treasury capital. And let’s not forget that the Fed kept their funds rate negative in real (inflation-adjusted) terms for two years, which no doubt “helped†many home values go parabolic over the past few years.
Whatever you subsidize, you get more of –right? Now the taxpayer is heavily subsidizing both sides of the RE market: supply and demand. Predictable end result: historically low risk premiums (low rates on mortgages & MBSs) in a time of historically high default risk, sky-high prices and overextended borrowers. See PMI Group’s breakdown of default risk by city at WSJ.com: http://tinyurl.com/dd6ps.
Is having the government pick winners & losers really a “free market†or “pro-business†philosophy? Are you a “Big Government Libertarian�
Discuss, enjoy...
HARM
#housing